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Trump argument for voter fraud bolstered: Clinton could have received 800,000 votes from noncitizens

hillary clinton
© Evan Vucci/Associated Press/File
Hillary Clinton is estimated to have collected 81 percent of noncitizen votes, which may have helped her carry a state, a researcher says.
Hillary Clinton garnered more than 800,000 votes from noncitizens on Nov. 8, an approximation far short of President Trump's estimate of up to 5 million illegal voters but supportive of his charges of fraud.

Political scientist Jesse Richman of Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, has worked with colleagues to produce groundbreaking research on noncitizen voting, and this week he posted a blog in response to Mr. Trump's assertion.

Based on national polling by a consortium of universities, a report by Mr. Richman said 6.4 percent of the estimated 20 million adult noncitizens in the U.S. voted in November. He extrapolated that that percentage would have added 834,381 net votes for Mrs. Clinton, who received about 2.8 million more votes than Mr. Trump.

Mr. Richman calculated that Mrs. Clinton would have collected 81 percent of noncitizen votes.

"Is it plausible that non-citizen votes added to Clinton's margin? Yes," Mr. Richman wrote. "Is it plausible that non-citizen votes account for the entire nation-wide popular vote margin held by Clinton? Not at all."

Comment: "[N]oncitizen voting is illegal and, thus, fraud." Could there be a more basic argument for better border controls along with a comprehensive review of voter rolls? Why would the DOJ frustrate such efforts?


Cross

National Council of Churches calls on white Christians to repent America's 'original sin' of 'white racism'

common rapper
On Wednesday, the National Council of Churches (NCC), which claims to represent more than 45 million people of faith across the United States, held a rally on the National Mall in Washington D.C. to mark the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination by calling on America to "Act To End Racism."

The event featured a huge list of speakers, most of whom were pastors, priests, or leaders of religious organizations, but the founders of Ben and Jerry's, Hollywood actor Danny Glover, and Black Lives Matter activist DeRay Mckesson also made featured appearances.

However, regardless of the individual speakers or their personal backgrounds, all of them had one resounding message: White Americans are oppressing "black and brown people" through a deliberate system of "white supremacy," and they must repent and seek redemption by taking action to destroy that system.

Attention

High-speed truck collision destroys overpass in epic stunt, driver facing criminal charges

Roadblock sign
© Julia Gordon / Reuters
Quebec road construction sign.
A truck driver could face criminal charges for an extraordinary smash that saw their vehicle plow right into a pedestrian bridge, showering a Canadian motorway with animal feed.

The spectacular crash, caught on camera by a fellow motorist, occured in Repentigny when the back of the dump truck collided dramatically with a pedestrian overpass, shedding its load in a confetti-like expulsion.

Despite the apparent speed of the crash, local reports say nobody was injured in Wednesday's collision. However, the footbridge over the normally-busy stretch of Highway 40 has since been pulled down over safety concerns.

Cell Phone

Russian internet watchdog seeks block on Telegram messenger over refusal to give up encryption keys it doesn't have

Telegram
© Kirill Kallinikov / Sputnik
Telegram messenger service on a telephone screen
Russia's internet watchdog has requested that the Telegram internet messenger service be blocked, after it failed to hand over encryption keys to special services before the given deadline.

The press statement released by Roskomnadzor on Friday reads that the agency has addressed a district court in Moscow with a demand "to limit the access to all resources belonging to the Telegram Messenger Limited Liability Partnership on the internet on Russian territory." It specifies that the move is a result of the Federal Security Service's (FSB) discovery that Telegram was not observing the Russian law that regulates data exchange between the security services and internet companies.

The court now has five days to decide whether to start the proceedings into the request.

Blackbox

EU will neither approve nor stop Russian Nord Stream 2 pipeline to Europe

Stop sign and sky
© Global Look Press
A European Commission energy official has said that neither the commission nor the European Union would approve the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project led by Russian energy giant Gazprom, but added it would not be sanctioned either.

"We believe that Nord Stream 2 does not promote the diversification of sources and routes of gas supplies," Dominique Ristori said at a briefing in Kiev on Friday. "So, if the pipeline is built, it won't be backed by the EU and the EC in particular."

According to the official, there are only two ways for the EC to deal with the project. The commission may issue a mandate for negotiations with Russia over the Nord Stream 2 project. The second option is to introduce amendments to the EU Gas Directive in order to extend it over all the gas pipelines, including those from third countries.

Binoculars

FBI cover-up suggests anti-Trump motive behind Las Vegas massacre

paddock vegas
It has been more than six months since the deadliest shooting in modern U.S. history killed 59 and injured 851, when Stephen Paddock allegedly opened fire on a crowded country music festival in Las Vegas, yet the American public has few answers as to a motive for the massacre or whether others were involved in the planning or operationalizing of the attack.

It is important to point out that TFTP is not attempting to paint this shooting in any political light. We are merely reporting on alternative information for the sole purpose of seeking truth. Moreover, TFTP is not attempting to stereotype any group by reporting this information. This information is being presented from a politically neutral position.

Since the attack on Oct. 1, 2017, there has been a consistent lack of transparency that has raised questions as to whether some type of cover-up was ongoing. Legitimate inquiry into the attacks has reportedly been shut down at the highest levels, and high-ranking FBI officials in Washington are involved in a cover-up.

The FBI's "official" narrative goes something like this: Paddock was a mysterious lone wolf gunman. He was a mystery man and habitual gambler who snapped, bought guns, and shot up a music festival - and no one knows why.

This massive cover-up involves the FBI attempting to hide the fact that they have evidence that the election of President Trump was a catalyst for the radicalization of Paddock - and that other persons of interest could potentially be involved in the massacre.

Comment: See also:


Light Sabers

China will defend its interests 'at any cost' as Trump threatens $100bn more in tariffs

US imports
© Aly Song / Reuters
Imports from the US are seen at a supermarket in Shanghai, April 3, 2018
Responding to Donald Trump's threat to impose an additional $100 billion in tariffs on China, Beijing said it did not want a trade war, but was not afraid to "follow suit to the end" to protect its core economic interests.

"The Chinese position has been made very clear," according to a Friday statement by a spokesman for the ministry of commerce. Beijing doesn't seek to engage in an economic conflict, but in the worst-case scenario, it is "not afraid to fight a trade war."

China "will follow suit to the end" should Washington disrespect its opposition to American "unilateralism and trade protectionism." Beijing would defend the country's interests "at any cost" and won't hesitate to take counter measures.

China also slammed Washington's unilateralism which, it says, undermines global free trade. Meanwhile, the Chinese economy will carry on with reforms and will continue to open up to the world in order to "safeguard the multilateral trading system" and promote the liberalization of global trade and investment, the ministry stated.

Dollars

Swiss people to vote on Sovereign Money Initiative in June 2018

Swiss francs
The Swiss Federal Council has just announced the date of the referendum on the Sovereign Money Initiative (or "Vollgeld-Initiative" in German) will be 10th June 2018. Swiss voters will be asked who should be allowed to create new Swiss francs: UBS, Credit Suisse and other private commercial banks or the Swiss National Bank which is obliged to act in the interest of Switzerland as a whole.

The announcement from the Swiss Federal Council can be viewed in German or French or Italian here.

The arbitrary way in which commercial banks can create money leads to credit bubbles, an unstable financial system and excessive indebtedness according to well-known scientists and economists. Electronic money brought into existence by commercial banks is displacing cash more and more: currently only 10 per cent of the money in circulation in Switzerland - namely the coins and banknotes - is brought into existence by the Swiss National Bank.

House

Sergei Skripal's pets found dead after investigators seal off home

Home of former double agent Sergei Skripal
© Hannah McKay / Reuters
Police guard the cordoned-off area around the home of former double agent Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, April 3, 2018
The mystery surrounding the poisoning of Sergei Skripal has deepened after British officials confirmed the deaths of his pets. A cat and two guinea pigs died after investigators sealed off the ex-double agent's home.

Russia's UN envoy has called for an explanation of the animals' deaths. Skripal and his 33-year-old daughter Yulia became seriously ill on March 4 after being exposed to a nerve agent and his home was sealed off by investigators days later.

Bizarro Earth

Down social constructionism's epistemic rabbit-hole

Peter L. Berger
The popularisation of 'social constructionism' is widely agreed to be traceable to the publication of The Social Construction of Reality by the sociologists Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann in 1966. In subsequent years, this concept attracted a large number of young, mostly left-leaning academics to the humanities departments of French universities, where social construction became an ideological tool useful to those engaged in the Parisian youth rebellion of 1968. From there, it spread rapidly though humanities departments in Europe and America, and into the social sciences.

The changes in intellectual thinking that this development catalysed reverberate across the West's academic institutions to this day. What transpired in the late sixties was nothing short of a cultural revolution, riding a wave of academic trends referred to as 'social constructionism,' 'postmodernism,' and 'poststructuralism,' although it never became entirely clear if or how these concepts differ from one another. While foreign to some, social constructionist jargon is now routinely invoked by the young academics who successfully conquered the humanities over the ensuing 40 years.

Comment: